Monday, July 20, 2009

The Long Affray and The Towers of Trebizond



a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZ7ipIT-uS0ohPTKZKK0UBkLWODVhDwKidYCsnlKzOefxqeBMYkNzq0qOowtgLA9Y4baO0zxUxGLPiB9K9kLPlNrNAViDuMyp5hTdWKT_5hyphenhyphenKMG9ZTNsP051GYwDR5X8R4Y3r4X0eLpowS/s1600-h/longaffray.jpg"img style="MARGIN: 0px 0px 10px 10px; WIDTH: 160px; FLOAT: right; HEIGHT: 233px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5360622839282153266" border="0" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZ7ipIT-uS0ohPTKZKK0UBkLWODVhDwKidYCsnlKzOefxqeBMYkNzq0qOowtgLA9Y4baO0zxUxGLPiB9K9kLPlNrNAViDuMyp5hTdWKT_5hyphenhyphenKMG9ZTNsP051GYwDR5X8R4Y3r4X0eLpowS/s320/longaffray.jpg" //aOver the past couple of days Liberal Democrat Voice has posted (a href="http://www.libdemvoice.org/lib-dem-bloggers-summer-reading-part-i-15677.html"part 1/a and a href="http://www.libdemvoice.org/lib-dem-bloggers-summer-reading-part-ii-15688.html"part 2/a) several bloggers' summer reading recommendations. My own choices are in part 2 and I thought I would tell you a little more about them here.br /br /My first choice - a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0571242006/theliberaldemocr"The Long Affray/a by Harry Hopkins - was one of a number of rural history books reviewed by a href="http://www.historytoday.com/MainArticle.aspx?m=19933amp;amid=16398"John Patrick/a in the November 1987 issue of History Today. He wrote:br /divblockquotepemRider Haggard hated poachers, describing them as 'cowardly villains recruited from among the worst characters in the neighbourhood'. He would have had little time for Harry Hopkins's The Long Affray (PaperMac)./em/ppemThis book, based largely on original sources, tells the story of the long-drawn-out war between landowners and poachers, and the efforts of such men as Cobbett and Bright to reform the game laws./em/ppemIt is a lively, stimulating, committed book. The author is clearly outraged by the plight of the rural poor and the lengths to which landowners would go to pre- serve their game./em/ppemThe evidence inevitably gives a biased picture. Prosecuted poachers figure in the records. Landowners – if there were any – who allowed labourers to take their game do not. Sometimes, too, Mr Hopkins lays indignation on with a trowel, and he perhaps overstates the wider importance of the conflict between the poachers and the preservers of game. But it is a worthwhile account of an otherwise neglected topic./em/p/blockquotedivBy one of those coincidences, the next book Patrick discusses in the article is by Keith Snell, who supervised my Masters dissertation on Richard Jefferies./divbr /div/divdivMy second choice was a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0006544215/theliberaldemocr"The Towers of Trebizond/a by Rose Macaulay. The introduction a href="http://www.nybooks.com/shop/product-file/39/thet1239/introduction.pdf"Jan Morris/a em(PDF file)/em wrote for a recent American edition of the book captures its appeal and explains its background well:a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiU-2rco30EBVhxlu95GJ7LKldRO2L4Ig7aP3QKRk3Zxzqr-fniUI2jY-8DgU3V71B3ExKAWJQkDnJsqsPUAnKsNy42LMLIthcvD8vO0dkm5amuyDBGvg16GuLLaBNLCwL-SqB4yKRvrX4x/s1600-h/trebizond.jpg"/a/divembr /blockquotepemFor although this is a very funny novel, witty, satirical, and sometimes downright farcical—a book to be read throughout for sheer pleasure—nevertheless it is a sad book too. It rides above its own comedy. It is a novel, a travel book, an entertainment, but it is also, I think, covertly confessional./em/pa href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcEfNWScvCn66-OL3UMYqW9ljBjN1tiOQMriqGlPfMvVYW78b8gnPjNcA6DJr5nxIBYQfdA82w9m2LTjIBW-xtEzKIk0VILqXLdFox6daGokOcU3DrWTLRITIzCCcRUNoaX-V2jlswrwwJ/s1600-h/trebizond.jpg"img style="MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 200px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 320px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5360625365570033058" border="0" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcEfNWScvCn66-OL3UMYqW9ljBjN1tiOQMriqGlPfMvVYW78b8gnPjNcA6DJr5nxIBYQfdA82w9m2LTjIBW-xtEzKIk0VILqXLdFox6daGokOcU3DrWTLRITIzCCcRUNoaX-V2jlswrwwJ/s320/trebizond.jpg" //a /ememHigh-spirited, sociable, well off, Rose Macaulay lived and died a spinster, but not because she wanted to. The highly educated and extremely clever daughter of a schoolmaster, she had for many years been the lover of a married man, and this had led to her estrangement from the Anglican Church. Her lover had died in 1942, but if there is some trace of bitterness to her portrait of the Reverend the Honourable bigot, even a touch of cruelty, it is perhaps because she had felt betrayed or abandoned by such men of God./embr /pememBy the time she published The Towers of Trebizond, in her seventy-seventh year, she had in fact been rescued from disillusionment, and returned to Anglicanism, by another clergyman, the Reverend J. H. C. Johnson—their correspondence was posthumously published in the 1960s. It seems unkind to say so, but without her lapse in faith this subtle and paradoxical novel would have been a far lesser work./em/p/blockquoteblockquotep/ememThe sadness and loneliness that now and then informs its bubbly humor, the suggestions of quest that become ever stronger as the story proceeds, undoubtedly spring from her own spiritual and romantic unease, and give the book its profounder stature./em/p/blockquote/divdiv class="blogger-post-footer"img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/6606798-6808166960233748077?l=liberalengland.blogspot.com'//div

technorati tags:
| |
More at: News 2 Cromley

No comments: